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PowerShell Troubleshooting Guide

You're reading from   PowerShell Troubleshooting Guide Minimize debugging time and maximize troubleshooting efficiency by leveraging the unique features of the PowerShell language

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782173571
Length 206 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Michael Shepard Michael Shepard
Author Profile Icon Michael Shepard
Michael Shepard
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. PowerShell Primer FREE CHAPTER 2. PowerShell Peculiarities 3. PowerShell Practices 4. PowerShell Professionalism 5. Proactive PowerShell 6. Preparing the Scripting Environment 7. Reactive Practices – Traditional Debugging 8. PowerShell Code Smells Index

Filter left


As discussed in Chapter 1, PowerShell Primer, pipelines are a central feature of PowerShell. Cmdlets can sometimes create a tremendous amount of data though, and pushing that data through a pipeline does have performance implications in terms of memory and processor usage. Filter left is the principle that objects should be filtered as early as possible in the pipeline. Since pipelines flow from left to right, the filter should be as far to the left as it can be.

For example, the following pipelines have the same results and to show the SQL Server datafiles (*.mdf) in order of size:

Even though the results are the same, the execution is about as different as possible. The first pipeline collects all of the files on the disk into a collection, sorts that list, and then selects the .mdf files. The second passes all of the files on the disk again, but filters them before sorting. The third example only creates objects for the .mdf files and only sorts those objects.

Using the Measure...

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